“But you aren’t in the pack anymore.”
Dustin frowned and didn’t answer. Instead, he sat up, cradled her in his arms, and pushed up. He strode with her toward the water.
“Hell no, it’s cold!”
Dustin stopped in a flash. “Shit. I forgot you’re human. You have chilly bumps.”
She snickered and wrapped her arms around her middle to try and keep some warmth there. “Chilly bumps?”
“That’s what my mom called them.” Dustin walked her back to the blanket and dressed her like she was an incapable toddler, all the while wearing such a serious expression.
“I’m not going to die because of a little cold weather you know,” she said, amused.
“You could catch a cold.”
“And take some cold medicine.”
“Or pneumonia. I heard that’s a serious thing.” He shoved the bags of cold food off the blanket and wrapped it around her until only her eyeballs showed.
“Oh my gosh, you are ridiculous.”
Dustin stood there, hands on his hips, surveying his work. With a satisfied nod, he grabbed his clothes and the food and said magnanimously, “You may eat in my car, with the heat on full-blast. I’m probably going to melt, but fuck it. You let me put my dick in your—”
“Okay, that’s good. Let’s not suck out all the romance from our night, shall we?”
“Right.” He led her in the direction of the parking lot. “You hump very nicely and diligently. Compliment jar, you owe me a blow job.”
“That’s not how it is supposed to work, and furthermore, that’s one of the pros of being a future vampire. No blow jobs.”
“Oh, because of your future fangs?” Dustin scrunched up his face. “Okay point for that one. Con, no reflection in the mirror, so how are you supposed to put on make-up or trim your pubes?”
Emma laughed so loud her abs hurt. “Why are you using a mirror for that? Just look down, dumbass. And they have vampire mirrors now. You just flip a little switch, and it casts this special light so vampires can see themselves. They even invented some vampire app for phones so we can take selfies. Hiss, hiss.”
“Also con, you won’t have a soul anymore.”
“Says who?”
“Says everyone.”
Emma rolled her eyes. Her parents were the nicest people she knew. They definitely had souls. “Pro, I’ll be able to fly, shift into this crazy powerful ball of bats, and get really strong. Also pro, my boobs will stay perky for thousands of years.”
But Dustin had stopped and was looking behind them now with narrowed eyes, so she halted her penguin waddle. “What’s wrong?”
Dustin’s nostril’s flared slightly as he inhaled, and now his eyes were glowing so brightly they were hard to look at. He stood frozen like a stone, his attention on the woods behind them, but when Emma looked, she didn’t see or sense anything.
Dustin said something too low for her to understand, so she frowned at his lips and waited. He didn’t repeat it, though. Instead, he pressed his hand on her lower back and guided her in front of him, hurrying her toward the parking lot, his attention never wavering from something behind them.
Now she had real chilly bumps. If his wolf senses were all riled up, then something was wrong. She opened the front of the blanket so she could walk faster, but her high heels still kept her from sprinting. And anyway, when she tried, Dustin pulled her back and told her, “Slow. Don’t run.”
“Are we being hunted?” That was the only thing that made sense right now. Why else wasn’t she allowed to give into her instincts to flee and bolt from this place?
“I don’t know.” His voice sounded odd. A lie?
“By an animal or shifter.”
He didn’t answer.
“Dustin!”
“I don’t know!” but his voice still sounded weird. Off, just a little.
By the time they reached the car, she was panting in fear. As he helped her inside, there was this awful feeling that something bad would happen to Dustin while he was running around the back of the car to get in. She shoved his door open to save him a precious millisecond.
Dustin jammed the key into the ignition and turned over the engine, shifted into reverse, and peeled out of the spot. And before he was even stopped, he had it shifted into first and was gunning it out of the dark and empty parking lot. The clouds had covered the moon and all the stars so it was dark outside the window.
“Everything is fine,” Dustin said loudly over the roar of the engine as he switched to second gear. “I was just being careful.”
“Bullshit,” she called him out.
His teeth were clenched tightly, and he kept checking the rearview mirror. Another secret Dustin wanted to keep. Add it to the pile.
She huffed a breath and ripped her gaze away from him to stare out the window.
But as she watched the dark woods blurring by, she could’ve sworn she saw something massive running parallel to the road, way off in the trees. Something monstrous.
And then she heard it—the long call of a wolf.
Only there were no wild wolves here.
Dustin was panting hard, exposing his neck. To her? She was human and no threat to him. Another long wolf howl filled the air.
“Fuck,” Dustin gritted out as though in pain.
And because she was desperate to end whatever was happening to him, she leaned over and pressed a kiss against his bicep. “It’s okay. I’m here. Everything is fine. We just need to get out of hearing range. Foot on the gas, one mile at a time. It’s me and you.”